Last weekend, a group of hackers pushed the idea further and managed to put together a prototype that truly controlled a Tesla Model S through commands translated from brain activity, aka mind control.

The project, called Teslapathic, was created during a 36-hour hackathon that took place over the weekend in Berkeley.

The four hackers, Abenezer Mamo, Casey Spencer (top right), Lorenzo Caoile (top left), and Vivek Vinodh, were inspired by “the rapid advancement of the automated auto industry” and wanted to showcase ” the future of human-computer interfaces, mind controlled devices”, according to their development page.

“My team wrote a machine learning training program for an EEG headset that learned when its user was thinking forward or stop and created corresponding variables. Those variables were translated to an analog PPM signal through an Arduino, then broadcast to actuators on the pedals through a standard RC radio. A head-mounted gyro controlled a modified windshield wiper motor mounted to the steering wheel.”

Here are pictures of the setup inside the Model S:

As Spencer’s puts it, “it doesn’t not work”. Their machine learning algorithms managed to translate brain activity to “Stop” and “Go”, but the limited time and the safety requirements pushed them to limit the capacity of the prototype.

But they still delivered a demonstration to show that it technically works: